Gooden connected on 13-of-20 shots and grabbed 16 rebounds for
the Cavaliers, who have won six of their last seven games
overall.

"My opportunities came and fortunately I came through for my
team," Gooden said. "I trusted my teammates and my teammates
trusted me and I got the opportunity to come through."

"We needed every point and bit of sweat from every guy tonight,
but Drew was fantastic," Cavaliers coach Mike Brown said. "He
was a physical presence in there in addition to the offense."

Gooden fell just two points shy of tying his career high set
against the Bucks last season.

"They were tailing on LeBron and we knew we had to get to the
open areas and trust each other to find the open shot," Gooden
said.

James was held to a season-low eight points, marking the eighth
time in his four-year career he has been held under
double-figures. His previous season low was 15 points on
December 11 at New Orleans.

"Win, lose or draw, I've got to play a better game, but we won
the game, I was fortunate," said James, who handed out nine
assists. "Out of my 13 shots, I think 11 of them were good
shots, but I'm not worried about my shots because we got the
win."

Hughes and Eric Snow drained consecutive jumpers with 2:55
remaining, capping an impressive 12-0 surge to help Cleveland
build an 86-82 advantage. Gooden scored six points in the run.

The Bucks never recovered thereafter, scoring just four points
the rest of the way. Milwaukee was outscored, 27-12, in the
fourth quarter.

"It didn't look pretty (the fourth quarter)," Bucks guard Mo
Williams said. "We missed some easy shot and they hit shots
when they counted. We just got caught in a funk. That's a part
of basketball."

"We started contesting shots and it showed what kind of
defensive team we are when we shut it down," James said. "We
held a good team to 13 points in the fourth quarter."

Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 11 points and nine rebounds for the
Cavaliers, who shot 41 percent (36-of-87) from the floor and
pulled down 18 offensive rebounds.

Michael Redd scored 26 points and Andrew Bogut added 16 and 10
rebounds for the Milwaukee, which had its seven-game home
winning streak snapped.

"We've got to be able to play half court," Bucks coach Terry
Stotts said. "We have to be able to play that. We're not
always going to be able to get the run-outs."